Northwestern was hanging in there on the road against USC in the Coliseum. The offense was leaning on the Trojans and gradually spilling across the field like a gravy stain spreading over a paper tablecloth. They were matching them point for point. And then the USC quarterback fumbled a ball right to a gigantic Wildcat defensive tackle who was plowing straight ahead towards the end zone for a devastating go-ahead touchdown, and apparently that's when USC had the ‘Cats right where they wanted them.
Inches before Najee Story triumphantly gallumphed into the endzone on a picture perfect big man touchdown, USC quarterback Jayden Maiava streaked across the field, lowered his helmet, and smacked it into Story’s hands, jarring the football loose, and turning a momentum-swinging touchdown into a deflating touchback. The fumble out of the endzone rule is one of the most punitive in sports. It’s hard to think of equivalents– perhaps a batter getting blasted in the kneecap by a fastball only for the New York Review Center to determine that several molecules of his bat hit the ball and instead of being at first, he foul tipped and struck out and also needs a new knee. It would be like if the penalty for missing a free throw is that a referee performs a flying knee strike to the player’s ball sack. Few things are more dismaying.
But something even more disturbing happened before this play. The infamous trickster and charlatan Lincoln Riley once again got away with a fiendish and illegal scheme so disgusting and contrary to the principles of Fair Play and Sports Man-ship that he should not only be fired for his actions but possibly imprisoned in an oubliette in the hopes that his crimes against the game of football can perhaps one day be forgotten by a shocked and stricken nation.
On November 7, 2025, the USC Trojans impersonated their own punter. This man had all the makings of a punter: a punter’s stance, a punter’s helmet, and even the punter’s jersey number. But the person who came in was not a punter but a backup quarterback in disguise who, using the well-honed form and swashbuckling élan of a passer and instead of a punter’s ungainly lunge, easily threw to a wide open receiver. The USC coaching staff had secretly and, I assume, after many sinister meetings held in torchlit antechambers sealed off from the prying eyes of decency, changed quarterback Sam Huard’s number to 80, the same as their punter. They had to do this because otherwise the Wildcats would have easily been able to tell that Huard was going to throw the ball, not only from his quarterback number, but because he presumably had the Mark of the Huard that instantly identifies him and all members of his family as backup quarterbacks, a trade which they have practiced in all corners of the globe since antiquity
My sources say the death penalty, for punt shenanigans, being considered for USC. I am pro-special teams and take no pleasure in reporting this.
Technically, USC switched the punter number in the official gameday program that was freely available to Northwestern, who did not effectively scour the roster for any suspicious late jersey movement among backup quarterbacks. But, according to Rodger Sherman, who I trust more than anyone living on knowing the rules surrounding elaborate fake punts, the Trojans got away with using their real punter for subsequent punts. You can’t use two guys with the same number; USC should have been flagged for Illegal Number Duplication every time he appeared on the field and also the referee should have tackled him for a citizen's arrest. The Big Ten agreed and released a statement from its Rosemont headquarters/Brazilian Meats Restaurant saying the Trojans should have been penalized for “Unfair Tactics.” The conference continues to review the incident, which I hope will mean that USC will be forced to surrender the win, disband its football team, and send the coaches who contemplated such a scheme in exile to the University of Iowa where they respect punting and punters. Any attempt by these mountebanks to design an avant-garde punting trick there would be received by Kirk Ferentz contemptuously squinting at them while biting into a raw onion.
If USC wants to use a quarterback as a punter by giving them the same number, he should also be required to undergo experimental Face/Off surgery and completely take over his life, slowly going insane while realizing he is going to have to kick a ball if the opponent is going to take him seriously
Shame on Lincoln Riley for his dastardly plans. Is this the type of thing that he wants associated with a university, which is a place for education? What is he teaching his players, that it is ok to violate the trust of their opponents like he is performing some sort of cheap three card monte-style chicanery with his punting? Can we not expect basic integrity when it comes to special teams? Also shame on him for figuring out in the second half that Northwestern couldn’t really cover Makai Lemon and repeatedly throwing to him as they easily pulled away in the second half without having to resort to trap doors or infiltrating the Northwestern sidelines, or coming out in ghillie suits and hiding in the grass only to pop up and score touchdowns.
The clock is ticking for the ‘Cats, who now only have three more chances to earn a bowl berth the honorable way. Fortunately they are playing Michigan, a university that would never resort to trickery, skulduggery or disguises to gain an advantage on the football field.
OH GODDAMMIT THEY HAVE TO PLAY MICHIGAN WHERE?I can’t think of a more catastrophically annoying idea than the concept of “playing Michigan at Wrigley Field.” Home games against the Wolverines are bad enough when Ryan Field was turned into the world’s largest outdoor Harrumphing Concert; add in the novelty of Wrigley Field and the chorus of maize and gold-clad people complaining about holding penalties will be louder at Wrigley than the time I saw Nelson Velazquez hit a grand slam to bring the Cubs all the way back in a game they were losing 7-0 by second inning.
This is the top google search for The Most Annoying Wrigley Field-Related Baseball Image that doesn't involve Jeff Garlin
Michigan is in a second consecutive “underwhelming” season off of their triumphant 2023 where the program both won a national championship and also completed what football experts are calling the most irritating sports season in human history. The Wolverines spent the year enmeshed in one of the stupidest football scandals I’ve ever seen when some low-level maniac created an oafish spying program to decipher opponents’ signals that also involved him sneaking around the sidelines at Central Michigan like he was codenamed Gaseous Snake. The Michigan Spying Episode fed us sillier revelations each week until it ended with the NCAA leveling a bunch of pointless penalties and Michigan fans, every single one of whom is a lawyer, all simultaneously suing.
Michigan is still dealing with the consequences. Sherrone Moore was suspended two games this year and will miss the first game of next year’s season against powerhouse Western Michigan. The game had been scheduled to be played in Frankfurt, but Michigan moved it back to Ann Arbor. I’m not sure if the suspension has anything to do with it, but it would have been very funny playing a game in Germany while explaining that the head coach could not be there for espionage-related reasons.
But a “down year” for Michigan is still an excellent year for the vast majority of college football teams, and they will be heavily favored against Northwestern even in tough "road game." The Wolverines have looked a little sluggish in recent games against the bottom of the Big Ten; for example, they allowed Purdue to score points, which is pretty embarrassing.
Northwestern, at the same time, is leaning more and more into its possession-based oozing football. Every week they become more dependent on using Caleb Komolafe as a battering ram to the exclusion of almost any other offensive play. I am not complaining about this; I love seeing them become more and more leather-helmeted and hope they can have a drive that takes 25 minutes even if they don’t score a single point. If Michigan lets the ‘Cats turn this game into a clock-running slopfest without taking an overwhelming lead into the fourth quarter, they may regret it.
Another variable is that they are playing at a baseball stadium that in nearly all of its games has had a miserable surface. I don’t know if they got things under control; at least last year there did not seem to be the field issues that have plagued the games there in the past such as giant sink holes opening up in the grass and swallowing players who have had to be retrieved with a giant hook. I will never forget the image of ply stopping for several minutes near the goalline in the Iowa game a few years ago so the grounds crew could ineffectually stomp dirt into ankle-devouring divots nor the time a Purdue kicker somehow slid during his kicking motion. Northwestern has famously never won a game here, and the novelty has worn off; I don't know how other fans feel, but I'm getting a little tired of having to go from having games at a Ryan Field that is 60% visiting fans to 90% visiting fans at Wrigley. Football games only belong in baseball stadiums in one situation and that is horrible bowl games in cold weather cities that no one wants to go to.
Northwestern’s last two losses have sort of taken the wind out of my sails. It is frustrating to remain stuck on five wins week after week against tough teams. It is not likely and I wouldn’t bet on it, but if Northwestern manages to break the Wrigley curse, beat Michigan, and get bowl eligible on the same day I will end up spending the rest of the day on the ceiling.
INVISIBLE BIG TEN CITIESThe Great Commissioner has an atlas that shows all of the cities in his conference’s empire. He shows it to Marco Polo who sees them unfold from coast to coast, popping up features. The explorer remembers the freeways of Angelina unfolding before him in a shimmering, endless ribbon whose haze formed a curtain between the real and the possible. He remembers the great and terrible grotesques of Lafeya, their hammers poised above his head. And he remembers Piscataway, where he once had a nice sandwich.
"When you return to Italy, will you tell the people about the cities that you see?" the Commissioner asks.
“Each person is only able to receive the stories they can understand. When I talk about a city where memories are at war with the living, the gondolier or stevedore hearing it can only understand from the context of their own memories, their own ghosts. That city will be entirely different than the same city I tell you about, Commissioner. The cities all exist simultaneously to buttress and destroy each other.”
“What’s the cable TV market like for football where you’re from?” the commissioner asks.
It is an unwise traveler to Anna who arrives without legal representation. The city of Anna is a city of formal complaints, lawsuits, and hearings. To walk down the street is to invite a summons or be deposed as a witness to a dispute happening several feet away.
The citizens of Anna are busy appearing in courts, writing letters, and demanding evidence. They move furtively through alleys and sewers to avoid further complaints and denunciations and subpoenas. Or they sneak about themselves, trying to track down the targets of their lawsuits. The largest growing industry in Anna are people who will disguise themselves to deliver notices. They pop out of garbage receptacles and paint themselves like tree bark; they hoist themselves onto ceilings and dangle themselves from light fixtures. The most diabolical of them disguise themselves as someone their target is serving papers to only to whirl around serve their target before anyone has time to activate a smoke bomb and melt into the streets.
The city is filled with discarded paper from letters and transcripts. They blow into alleys and onto people’s faces. There is so much official paper flying from windows and open doors and briefcases accidentally jarred and flying open while a dimayed Annan sinks to his knees that the sheets stick together and congeal into hardened bricks. These paper bricks form into large structures that are the only things built in Anna. It is legally impossible to do any sort of construction, and people cram into wobbling paper buildings to hide from each other or to spring through the walls unexpectedly.
The people of Anna send their disputes to courts, committees, and government bodies. But these organizations are beset by infighting and formal complaints as well. All day, matters are referred to responsible bodies whose members are off filing motions each other or disguising themselves as statuary in order to serve papers to rival members. They all form networks of complex alliances and constantly betray each other. They ambush each other with trick complaints that actually turn out, when read aloud, to be a complaint against the person reading it. No dispute has ever been successfully settled.
The citizens of Anna have heard about this section of my writings and dispute it. I have already had fifteen pointed legal documents delivered by a boat navigating around the most treacherous capes to get here and demand my appearance in Literature Court before getting another note that Literature Court had been dissolved and placed under the aegis of Literary Court and then another telling me to disregard the previous letter, Literature Court had in fact never gone anywhere and is in fact suing the members of Literary Court for Court Infringement before getting another letter telling me that Literature Court is actually dissolving and I was hearing from the true Committee on the Activities of Literature Court and not a series of belligerent imposters, who had sent the previous letters and are themselves the target of multiple lawsuits. I also received a letter that was just a drawing of a hand making an obscene gesture.
Under the advice of counsel, I should like to tell the Great Commissioner that Anna is an ordinary city with no unusual features.






















